Scientific Team - Uniqueness

Very few scientists have expressed interest in studying consciousness
and its relation with the larger whole by using so many disciplines
including quantum physics,
thermodynamics, information theory, complexity theory, self organizing systems,
neurosciences and related areas. These disciplines, when linked with the
study of transpersonal psychology, humanistic psychology, and
spriitually transformative experiences and similiar areas of
investigation, offer complementary and synergistic expertize all focused
on understanding the nature of the human condition specifically human
consciousness and the nature of reality.

Our scientific team faces a daunting challenge. They risk being
ostracized by their peers and often face challenges and the opinions of
those indoctrinated by the current scientific paradigms because it
challenges the very foundations of those existing paradigms.
Consequently this research is often met with great resistance by the
prevailing scientific establishment. Thus, having a ready and
eager team of many well-credentialed principal investigators and their
associates from such a broad array of disciplines and backgrounds is extremely
fortunate.

This combination of cutting edge scientific talent will bring together
in one program of study, not only highly respected professionals from
conventional science, but also individuals with new, unconventional and
possibly startling ideas and approaches to current phenomena that
currently have not been explained by mainstream science. A fully
coordinated, creative, exceptional approach that these teams and
individuals have been informally pursuing, largely outside their regular
academic assignments, will allow much more timely progress and better
integration of their individual findings.

In order to bring these
respected, creative scientists under one organizational umbrella to
create complementary and synergistic research programs, funding is
always needed to enable them to work full-time on these projects, liberated
from academic pressures and the constraints of confining investigations
only to accepted mainstream scientific paradigms.